Amy Gibson of Stitchery Dickory Dock wrote an excellent article on how to improve your piecing accuracy that is well worth the read. She lists five steps but the fifth deals with math in quilting. While I agree that quilting involves a lot of math, it isn’t necessary to understand the math behind the instructions if you are following a pattern to achieve good piecing accuracy. While I agree with most of what she says, here are a couple of things that I do differently. This is just my personal opinion (and the result of almost twenty years of trial and error). Please read and make your own choice, what works for me doesn’t necessarily work for everyone else.

I do NOT use steam while pressing. I don’t think it’s necessary, and the risk of distorting the fabric is higher with steam. I use the highest cotton setting while piecing and only add steam when I give my finished blocks a final press. And even then I only manually push the steam button and make sure that I don’t move the iron at all.

And I am not a fan of spray starch. I use Mary Ellen’s Best Press instead. (And I am not getting paid to endorse the product, I just happen to like it.) I used spray starch a long time ago and then gave it up at some point because it made the fabric sticky. That might have been the fault of the brand I was using but in any case, I didn’t like it. When I started working at the quilt shop, one of my co-workers recommended Best Press to me. I didn’t think it was necessary, I had been quilting without starch for at least ten years, and it worked, didn’t it? Then I won a small bottle of Best Press at a Christmas party game. So I figured I might as well try it. And the rest, as they say, is history. I loved it so much that I am buying it by the gallon now.